Buildings closed by coronavirus face another risk: Legionnaires’ disease
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[April 24, 2020]
By John Shiffman
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Commercial buildings
shuttered for weeks to stem the spread of the coronavirus could fuel
another grisly lung infection: Legionnaires’ disease.
Public health experts urged landlords across the globe to carefully
re-open buildings to prevent outbreaks of the severe, sometimes lethal,
form of pneumonia.
The sudden and sweeping closures of schools, factories, businesses and
government offices have created an unprecedented decline in water use.
The lack of chlorinated water flowing through pipes, combined with
irregular temperature changes, have created conditions ripe for the
bacteria that causes Legionnaires’ disease, they said.
If diagnosed early, Legionnaires’ disease poses less of a health risk
than COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus. Most cases can
be successfully cured with antibiotics, and Legionnaires cannot be
spread from human to human contact.
But as communities consider reopening, any commercial facility vacated
or underutilized for more than three weeks is at risk for a
Legionnaires’ outbreak, unless the water pipes are properly flushed and
otherwise sanitized, health experts and government officials say.
“After surviving COVID-19, who wants to open a building and have another
set of significant safety issues?” said Molly Scanlon, an Arizona
environmental health scientist who is leading a coronavirus task force
for the American Institute of Architects. “Our medical system is already
under enough stress as it is.”
Those at risk include schools, gyms, factories, hotels, restaurants and
outpatient surgical centers, Scanlon said. According to guidance updated
Wednesday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the
threat also applies to hot tubs, water fountains, sprinkler systems and
millions of water cooling towers atop commercial buildings.
“It’s a worldwide problem, one that can be solved with precautions,”
said British microbiologist Susanne Surman-Lee, who co-drafted reopening
guidelines for the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and
Infectious Diseases. “Most major corporations with consultants are
likely to be aware of the stagnant water systems issue, but this is
going to be a challenge for smaller retail-style shops, health clubs and
hotels.”
Water and sanitation organizations have joined the call for caution
during reopening.
“To be honest, this hasn’t really been part of a business continuity
planning on the real estate side of the world,” said Chris Boyd of NSF
International, an independent standards organization based in Michigan
and formerly known as the National Sanitation Foundation. “Right now,
very few companies are thinking through how water systems factor into
their continuity and reopening efforts. They’ve never had to deal with
such low occupancy.”
WATERBORNE RISKS
Legionnaires' disease, a pneumonia named after a deadly 1976 outbreak at
an American Legion convention in Philadelphia, is the chief waterborne
illness in the United States. Nearly 50,000 people were infected between
2000 and 2015, according to the CDC.
People with Legionnaires' disease develop pneumonia. Healthy people
usually recover, but often require hospitalization and antibiotics to
treat the lung infection. About one in 10 die, according to the CDC, but
among those who get Legionnaires' during a hospital stay, one in four do
not survive.
After a 2015 Legionnaires’ outbreak in which 10 New Yorkers died and at
least 100 people became ill, the city began regulating water cooling
towers, the suspected culprit. The same year, 12 deaths in Flint,
Michigan were linked to a Legionnaires’ disease outbreak, after
officials switched the city’s water source from a lake to a river
without taking proper precautions.
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A closed building complex with bars, clubs and event rooms,
Kulturbrauerei, is seen due to the current development in relation
to spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Berlin, Germany,
March 14, 2020. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse
Legionnaires' disease infects people when legionella bacteria is
disseminated into the air as an aerosol from water sources, such as
hot tubs, showerheads, fountains and industrial water cooling
systems.
The threat from Legionnaires’ disease is compounded, some experts
said, because its victims tend to display the same symptoms as
coronavirus patients, including cough, chills and fever, making
misdiagnosis a possibility.
“WE CANNOT RELAX”
A recent paper published by Chinese doctors in The Lancet found that
20 percent of coronavirus patients also had Legionnaires’ disease.
In a paper for the International Society of Travel Medicine,
Japanese doctors wrote of an 80-year-old man who died shortly after
returning from a Nile cruise in March. He was infected with both
legionella and coronavirus. Although doctors could not determine
which he caught first, they noted that legionella has been linked to
cruise ships, not hospitals.
“Our case, although fatal, highlights the importance of differential
diagnosis during the current COVID-19 epidemic, so we do not miss
the opportunity to diagnose other treatable causes of disease with
similar symptoms,” the doctors wrote.
Dr. Xiang-Yang Han of the University of Texas Anderson Cancer
Center, who has long studied Legionnaires disease, said he is less
worried about misdiagnoses and more concerned about prevention and
planning as communities reopen.
“We can not relax, even with the manpower shortage,” Han said. “Do
we have enough manpower to flush every facility? Of course, I’m
concerned. People are eager to get their businesses running, but
these are highly technical jobs and people need to know what they
are doing.”
Han said that anyone servicing water pipes before a reopening should
take the same precautions as one might to prevent the spread of the
coronavirus: wear gloves and a mask.
Steve Via of the American Water Works Association, which represents
utilities, scientists and academics, said small business owners in
particular should be vigilant. Any device dormant during the
shutdown and connected to the water system should be flushed.
“It’s not the landlord’s responsibility to check things like the ice
machine, the soda machine, those kinds of things, but they’ve been
sitting there for a long time,” Via said. “What we need to be doing
is just getting people to start thinking about this as if you went
to a house that you used as a summer place -- when you open it up,
you have a protocol you follow.”
Via added, “People don’t need to be frightened about this, but they
do need to be thoughtful.”
(Additional reporting by Charlie Szymanski in New York and Jane Ross
in Los Angeles. Editing by Jason Szep)
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